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News ID: 121470
Publish Date : 14 November 2023 - 21:56

Germany: 1-Million-Shell Target for Ukraine Infeasible

BRUSSELS (AFP) -- Germany’s defense minister said on Tuesday the EU will not hit a one-year target of sending a million artillery shells to Ukraine, as the bloc struggles to secure arms supplies for Kyiv.
The European Union pledged last year to deliver the desperately needed ammunition to Ukraine by March 2024 to help Kyiv battle against Russia’s invading forces.
So far, EU nations have only managed to provide 300,000 rounds from their existing stocks.
Countries are now placing joint orders for 155-millimetre shells but there are doubts over the capacity of defense companies to churn out enough in time.
“Unfortunately, the cautionary voices are now right,” German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said at a meeting with his EU counterparts in Brussels. “The one million will not be reached. We have to assume that.”
EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said a major issue was that European defense firms were exporting about 40 percent of production to other countries.
Estonian Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur said his country had placed a 280-million-euro order for ammunition -- “the biggest procurement in Europe at this very moment”.
“We will try to do the maximum to deliver the shells to Ukraine because they need it,” he said. “Look at Russia. They are producing today more than ever. They are getting shells from North Korea. Europe cannot say that Russia and North Korea can deliver and we cannot.”
The EU’s struggles to make good on promised deliveries comes as opposition in the United States Congress has thrown doubt on key ally Washington’s ability to sustain supplies.
On the ground, fighting appears to have ground to a stalemate as a much-anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive has failed to win back much territory.
Brussels says that together with EU member states it has funneled military support worth 27 billion euros ($29 billion) to Ukraine since February 2022.
Borrell in July proposed a new 20-billion-euro fund over the next four years to help cover arms deliveries to Ukraine.
But discussions over the EU initiative have stalled amid doubts from key member states.
Germany -- which last week said it would double its own funding for Ukraine to eight billion euros next year -- is reluctant to commit more money to the EU pot.